California
California Pinot Noir Wine Producer Starts To Make Wines In Burgundy

Two glasses of red wine
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Wild berries, forest floor, bright red cherries, minerality, morel mushrooms, floral notes, cassis and a lot more minerality… nothing on earth can produce the magically ethereal aromas that great Pinot Noir wines can evoke. The wine has broken more hearts than most, as once one experiences one of those bottles that transcends the drinker, they spend the rest of their lives chasing other bottles that live in the shadow of its outstanding predecessor. It is a very challenging grape variety both to grow and handle in the winery, and things can go south with it very quickly. Hence, only those who are madly in love with the grape are crazy enough to try to reach for that elusive dream – to make life-changing Pinot Noir wines.
Julien Howsepian at harvest time
Leigh-Ann Beverley/Bona Fide Productions
It was life-changing for Julien Howsepian, who graduated from U.C. Davis with a Bachelor of Science in Viticulture & Enology in 2008 and worked at various places to find where he belonged in the wine world. In 2012, he ended up at Kosta Browne, located in Sebastopol, in the Russian River Valley AVA, in Sonoma County, California. There, he was introduced to wines that went beyond his imagination, and he finally found his home, a home where he eventually became the winemaker.
And it has become a great match, as Kosta Browne has, through the years, zeroed in on the intricacies of each vineyard and expressed the nuances of specific plots. It takes a particular individual to have the drive and focus to oversee all the key decisions in their vineyards and be on top of critical moments in the various winemaking stages of each vessel of wine. But through the years, Kosta Browne has become relentless in their pursuit of perfection and Julien is the right person for the job as his passion has no limits.
And now, Julien is given a second jolt of energy that is only equaled to his early days at Kosta Browne, as they are making wines in Burgundy through a very special partnership with a multi-generational Burgundy négociant, and Julien is in heaven taking in all the wisdom from the motherland of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.
The Journey Towards Elegance
Gap’s Crown Vineyard
Kosta Browne
Kosta Browne Winery might have started off humbly with two co-workers, Michael Browne and Dan Kosta, who worked for the legendary Sonoma restaurant John Ash & Co., placing their tip money in a jar to buy their first grapes to make wine, but they went on to establish Kosta Browne in 1997 and then, to their surprise, received high scores for their 2003 Pinot Noirs. Yet, with any colossal success, there can always be backlash, with some criticizing the higher alcohol levels. Yet, Michael Browne has noted that the higher alcohol was initially an accident as he “couldn’t get ahead of the picking schedule,” and so they harvested a lot later than they intended; ironically, it was a great success for the times as high-end tasters of Pinot Noir had never tasted anything like it. Through time, Michael and Dan started to move towards a more elegant, fresher style of Pinot Noir without losing its depth and complexity.
Kosta Browne harvesting at night
Leigh-Ann Beverley/Bona Fide Productions
And now, under new ownership with Julien at the helm, Kosta Browne has become laser-focused on precision in their farming practices for the premium vineyards they either own, lease or have contracts to purchase fruit, and finding a balance between having a low intervention approach when it comes to winemaking that involves native fermentations yet having an eagle eye over each vessel, as sometimes the temperature needs a slight bit of raising or lowering. Or in a few cases, when it seems like the fermentation is slowing down, Julien and his team will bring that vessel outside, and for reasons that go beyond the temperature change, it perks right up in the fresh air, surrounded by nature. It is all part of their mission for “terroir-driven wines” that truly speak to their mantra: root-to-bottle.
Visiting The Motherland
A few years back, the leadership at Kosta Browne wanted to learn more about European wines, so they focused on tasting and discussing the top wine regions. After the devastating 2020 California fires, they decided they would get a lot more serious about potentially making wines in Europe, so they traveled there to immerse themselves in a few of the wine regions that most piqued their interest.
UNESCO World Heritage Site, Hospices de Beaune, in the Beaune village of Burgundy
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Julien said they were “blown away” by Europe’s history and way of life, and many wine regions greatly impressed them, yet the wines of Burgundy, France, took them to a level that they could only imagine. And it was fitting that such a legendary Pinot Noir wine producer would try to be part of the motherland of this very special red grape variety. But it was far from easy, as Burgundians are well-known for not liking outsiders, as they do not want their way of life of focusing on small plots with multi-generational wine families to ever change. But there has already been the forming of cracks in their way of life with families not being able to afford the property taxes, and soon there will be hard decisions of either allowing large French conglomerates to continue to buy vineyards or allow smaller foreign operations to purchase wine estates.
But there is another alternative, one that allows growers to keep their land while making a livable income that allows multi-generational producers to maintain a viable business that future generations will be eager to take over, and that is for foreigners to purchase grapes, or in some cases, purchase already made wine. And that is precisely what Kosta Browne did.
Vineyards in Sta. Rita Hills
Rachid Dahnoun
The leadership at Kosta Browne has a relationship with a Burgundy négociant/producer, who not only sources grapes to make his own wine but also sources wine from small family wineries, yet he will still play an essential part in aging the wine in oak. This Burgundy négociant/producer has asked to be kept anonymous, as it is looked down upon to work with foreigners in Burgundy. After going through many samples, they started buying wines already made by this Burgundy colleague in 2020. In 2022, Kosta Browne bought their own grapes, vinified different lots in their colleague’s winery and aged in his cellar. Today, they are selling their 2022 Burgundy wines to their customers, bringing the motherland of Pinot Noir to California – a place known for several different outstanding expressions of the grape from distinctively diverse regions throughout the state.
It has become a debate in recent times if keeping foreigners from purchasing Burgundy estates really helps the locals, as French conglomerates have been paying a fortune for famous vineyards and producers, raising the cost of living for those in the area as property taxes have become astronomical over time. But, at least in this case, the leadership of Kosta Browne has a relationship with someone in Burgundy who has been sourcing wine and making it for generations. Julien was quick to point out that they are being as respectful as possible by taking it slow, first buying already made wine, learning through tasting and spending time in their counterpart’s Burgundy wine cellar, then purchasing grapes that they made into wine themselves and looking for lesser-known gems that, through their Pinot Noir experience, will make great wine with a strong sense of terroir, a.k.a. place, as they wanted to prove their commitment before they start going after legendary vineyards.
Julien is fascinated by all facets of making wine in Burgundy and he always asks their partner in Burgundy about every little thing as there are so many differences. He noticed that there was always a “02” at the end of all the lot numbers for the Kosta Browne barrels of wines, so one day, he asked him about it. His Burgundy partner told him that the “02” at the end indicates that it is for Kosta Browne and it seemed to Julien to represent a second spark that reinvigorated this multi-generational négociant/wine producer. The Burgundy Kosta Browne project started in the middle of the pandemic when times were really tough for their Burgundy partner and even though he was initially weary of getting involved with a foreign wine producer, it became “his oxygen” injecting a “jolt of fresh energy.”
Sometimes, one has to go through the toughest times to realize that the unthinkable option is the best for the future for oneself and one’s family, as well as the community one adores. When the world is falling apart, all the illogical perceptions fall away, leaving only what matters standing, and that which matters is no longer veiled by those perceptions. Hence, it becomes a shining light for those willing to take the leap for a better tomorrow.
Kosta Browne wines
Shea Evans
Kosta Browne makes excellent Pinot Noir wines but their Chardonnay wines have come a long way with an intense sense of minerality, freshness and overall elegance. The two wines below are made from 100% Chardonnay, which ideally expresses all those attributes, and they have also added a Chablis Premier Cru to their Burgundy to their portfolio.
2021 Kosta Browne, Sparkling Wine, Blanc de Blancs, Keefer Ranch Single Vineyard, Russian River Valley, California: 100% Chardonnay. This wine is unfiltered and showcases Kosta Browne’s commitment to minimalistic winemaking, which is made using the Champenoise method. 20% aged in Austrian oak foudre and 9% new French oak. Enchanting aromas of citrus oil, wet stones and a delicate floral notes of white flowers that has a creamy texture and peach cobbler flavors with very fine bubbles that lightly tickle the palate lifted by crisp acidity.
2022 Kosta Browne, Chardonnay, El Diablo Vineyard, Russian River Valley, California: 100% Chardonnay with 100% whole cluster direct pressed with 46% new French oak. Lower yields give more concentration, while the higher elevation, averaging around 500 feet, retains high acidity. Delectable notes of spiced toast and lemon curd with underlying notes of minerality with nectarine crumble and quince paste with the rich flavors perfectly balanced by marked acidity and a long, flavorful finish with lots of vibrant tension.
California Single Vineyard Pinot Noir wines are listed below:
2022 Kosta Browne, Pinot Noir, Gap’s Crown Vineyard, Sonoma Coast, California: 100% Pinot Noir. This is Kosta Browne’s flagship wine, with them owning 30 acres of the Gap’s Crown Vineyard at various elevation levels. Anise seed cookie aromas entice the drinker to take a sip with hints of wild tarragon, adding another dimension to this wine with deep flavors of black forest tiramisu topped with fresh red cherries on the palate with some tannic structure, giving lift and drive to this mesmerizing beauty.
2022 Kosta Browne, Pinot Noir, Treehouse Estate Single Vineyard, Russian River Valley, California: 100% Pinot Noir. Treehouse is a 14-acre Russian River Valley estate single vineyard within the sub-region of Green Valley. Kosta Browne attained a 30-year lease on it and it is tucked away among massive redwoods and bordered by striking cypress trees. Intense minerality on the nose and exciting hints of truffle and violets give it an epic bouquet that combines two intoxicating fragrances that has a brilliant acidity that lights up this wine, as Green Valley is one of the cooler sub-regions in Russian River Valley, with raspberry liqueur flavors that has impeccably chiseled tannins that is like delicate lace.
California Appellation Pinot Noir wines are listed below:
2022 Kosta Browne, Pinot Noir, Sta. Rita Hills, California: 100% Pinot Noir. Despite California already having some outstanding wine regions such as Sonoma Coast and Russian River Valley, by the time Sta.Rita Hills, in the Central Coast, was brought to the attention of wine drinkers, yet it still quickly became a favorite among Pinot Noir enthusiasts. A cool climate area with plenty of sunshine, yet the fog and intense winds, which also help to lower the chance of fungal diseases, helps to keep temperatures cool, allowing for a longer growing season. This is an incredibly excellent example of why people love Sta. Rita Hills as it is really juicy with lots of fresh, pristine fruit balanced by mouthwatering acidity and round, silky tannins that has delicious flavors of blueberry muffins, crushed rocks and a hint of orange zest.
2022 Kosta Browne, Pinot Noir, Russian River Valley, California: 100% Pinot Noir. Russian River Valley Pinot Noir took the world by storm with its irresistible lushness and decadently rich flavors. Still, there are a lot more nuanced differences among the different sub-regions within Russian River Valley that are sometimes referred to as “neighborhoods,” and even within those neighborhoods, there can be distinctive differences among the vineyards. Some can have a lot more acidity and definition than others. This wine is a blend of eight different vineyards that give it an overall harmonious quality that first starts with a multilayered nose of cinnamon stick, blackberry compote and mossy bark with tannins that are seamlessly integrated creating a texture that is lush in its tactile expression yet the fresh acidity gives a vibrancy that makes this luxurious experience one filled with a tremendous amount of vitality.
Burgundy Pinot Noir wines are listed below:
2022 Kosta Browne, Beaune Premier, Burgundy, France: 100% Pinot Noir. A blend of Premier Cru vineyards – there are only 42 Premier Crus in the village of Beaune. Enchanting aromas that slowly unfurl in the glass with notes of rose petals, brambly fruit and red cherries laced with a fantastic saline minerality note with a supple texture and a long, expressive finish.
2022 Kosta Browne, Nuits-Saint-Georges, Burgundy, France: 100% Pinot Noir. A village-designated wine that is a blend of various vineyards in Nuits-Saint-Georges, which is known to make darker and bigger wines than the more delicate wines from the village of Beaune. Despite this being a village level, it has a strong sense of place with forest floor, wild morels and crumbled limestone that is fleshed out by ripe black cherries with more prominent tannins than the Beaune, yet they are still refined in quality and just give a bit more boldness on the palate.

California
Will this bill be the end of California’s housing vs environment wars?

By Ben Christopher, CalMatters
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
For years California has been stuck in a recurring fight between legislators who want the state to turbocharge new home construction and legislators determined to defend a landmark environmental protection law.
The final showdown in that long-standing battle may have just arrived.
A new bill by Oakland Democratic Assemblymember Buffy Wicks would exempt most urban housing developments from the 55-year-old California Environmental Quality Act.
If it passes — a big if, even in today’s ascendent pro-building political environment — it would mean no more environmental lawsuits over proposed apartment buildings, no more legislative debates over which projects should be favored with exemptions and no more use of the law by environmental justice advocates, construction unions and anti-development homeowners to wrest concessions from developers or delay them indefinitely.
In short, it would spell the end of California’s Housing-CEQA Wars.
“If we’re able to get it to the governor’s desk, I think it’s probably one of the most significant changes to CEQA we will have seen since the law’s inception,” said Wicks.
Wicks’ broadside at CEQA (pronounced “see-kwah”) is one of 22 housing bills that she and a bipartisan group of legislators are parading out Thursday as a unified “Fast Track Housing Package.” Wicks teed up the legislative blitz earlier this month when she released a report, based on the findings of the select committee she chaired last year, that identified slow, uncertain and costly regulatory approval processes as among the main culprits behind California’s housing crisis.
The nearly two dozen bills are a deregulatory barrage meant to blast away at every possible choke point in the housing approval pipeline.
Most are eye-glazingly deep in the weeds.
There are bills to standardize municipal forms and speed up big city application processes. One bill would assign state and regional regulatory agencies strict timelines to approve or reject projects and another would let developers hire outside reviewers if cities blow the deadlines. Different bills take aim at different institutions identified as obstructionist: the California Coastal Commission, investor-owned utilities and local governments throwing up roadblocks to the construction of duplexes.
Wicks’ bill stands out. It’s simple: No more environmental lawsuits for “infill” housing. It’s also likely to draw the most controversy.
“It’s trying something that legislators have not been willing to try in the past,” said Chris Elmendorf, a UC Davis law professor and frequent critic of CEQA. “And the reason they have not been willing to try in the past is because there are a constellation of interest groups that benefit from the status quo. The question now is whether those interest groups will kill this or there’s a change in the zeitgeist.”
A spokesperson for CEQA Works, a coalition of dozens of environmental, conservation, and preservation advocacy organizations, said the members of the group needed more time to review the new legislation before being interviewed for this story.
A spokesperson for the State Building and Construction Trades Council, which advocates on behalf of tens of thousands of unionized construction workers in California, said the organization was still “digging into” the details of the bill.
What’s the big deal?
The California Environmental Quality Act has been on the books since 1971, but its power as a potential check on development has ebbed and flowed with various court rulings and state legislative sessions. The act doesn’t ban or restrict anything outright. It requires government agencies to study the environmental impact of any decisions they make — including the approval of new housing — and to make those studies public.
In practice, these studies can take years to complete and can be challenged in court, sometimes repeatedly.
Defenders of how the law applies to new housing argue that CEQA lawsuits are, in fact, relatively rare. Critics counter that the mere threat of litigation is often enough to pare down or entirely dissuade potential development.
As state lawmakers have come around to the idea that the state’s shortage of homes is the main driver of California’s punishingly high cost of living — and a major political vulnerability for Democrats — CEQA has been a frequent target.
Until now, attacks on the law have generally come in the form of selective carve-outs, conditioned exemptions and narrow loopholes.
“If we’re able to get it to the governor’s desk, I think it’s probably one of the most significant changes to CEQA we will have seen since the law’s inception.”
Buffy Wicks, Assemblymember, Democrat, Oakland
There’s the law that lets apartment developers ignore the act — but only so long as they set aside some of the units at a discount and pay their workers union-level wages.
A spate of bills from two years ago waived the act for most homes, but only if they are reserved exclusively for low-income tenants.
There was the time a CEQA lawsuit held up a UC Berkeley student housing project over its presumptively noisy future tenants and the Legislature clapped back with a hyper-specific exemption.
Wicks’ new bill is different, in that the exemption is broad and comes with no strings attached. It would apply to any “infill” housing project, a general term for homes in already built-up urban areas, as opposed to fresh subdivisions on the suburban fringes.
That echoes a suggestion from the Little Hoover Commission, an independent state oversight agency, which made a series of “targeted reform” proposals to the environmental law last year.
“California will never achieve its housing goals as long as CEQA has the potential to turn housing development into something akin to urban warfare—contested block by block, building by building,” the report said. “The Commission recommends that the state exempt all infill housing from CEQA review— without additional conditions or qualifications.”
Wicks bill defines “infill” broadly as any housing in an urban area that’s either been previously developed or surrounded by developed lots and doesn’t sit on a wetland, a farm field, a hazardous waste site or a conservation area.
The site also has to be less than 20 acres to qualify for the exemption, but at roughly the size of 15 football fields, that’s not likely to be a limiting factor for most housing projects.
One possible rub: When a housing project varies from what is allowed under local zoning rules and requires special approval — a common requirement even for small housing projects — the exemption would not apply.
Enter another bill in the housing package, Senate Bill 607. Authored by San Francisco Democratic Sen. Scott Wiener, that bill would also exempt those rezonings from CEQA if the project is consistent with the city’s state-mandated housing plan.
“Put the two bills together and it’s really a dramatic raising of the ante in terms of what the pro-housing legislators are willing to put on the table and ask their colleagues to vote for,” said Elmendorf.
An environmental case against the Environmental Quality Act?
Environmental justice advocates regularly use the law to block or extract changes from developments that they argue will negatively affect low-income communities. Developers and lawyers regularly claim that organized labor groups defend the law to preserve it as a hard-nosed labor negotiation tool. Well-to-do homeowners who oppose local development projects for any reason may turn to CEQA to stall a project that otherwise passes muster on paper.
All these groups have pull in the California capitol. That may be one reason why this kind of bill hasn’t been introduced in recent memory.
Wicks said she thinks California’s Legislature may be ready to take up the cause. The severity of the housing crisis, Democratic electoral losses over the issue of unaffordability, and the urgency to rebuild in the wake of the Los Angeles wildfires all have created a “moment” for this argument, she said.
She, and other supporters of the bill, also insist that the cause of the environment is on their side too.
“I don’t view building infill housing for our working class communities in need as on par with drilling more oil wells in our communities, yet CEQA is applied in the same way,” she said.
Researchers have found that packing more homes into already-dense urban areas is a good way to cut down carbon emissions. That’s because living closer to shops, schools, jobs and restaurants mean more walking and biking and less driving, and also because downtown apartments, which tend to be smaller, require less energy to heat and cool.
Even if infill is, in general, more ecologically friendly than sprawl development, that doesn’t mean that a particular project can’t produce a wide array of environmental harms. In a letter to the Little Hoover Commission, the California Environmental Justice Alliance, a nonprofit member of CEQA Works, highlighted the 2007 Miraflores Senior Housing project in Richmond.
A final environmental impact report for the project “added strategies to mitigate the poor air quality, water quality, and noise impacts” associated with the development and “included plans to preserve the historic character of buildings, added key sustainability strategies, and improved the process for site clean up.” That report was certified by the city in 2009.
Jennifer Hernandez, a land-use attorney and one of the state’s most prolific critics of CEQA, said local permit requirements and public nuisance rules should be up to the task of addressing those problems, no outside litigation required.
“The whole construct of using CEQA to allow the dissenting ‘no’ vote, a community member with resources, to hold up a project for five years is just ridiculous,” she said. “It’s like making the mere act of inhabiting a city for the people who live there a harm to the existing environment.”
This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
California
Where in California do renters stay the longest?

A very tight market for California rentals means tenants move less frequently than the typical U.S. apartment dweller.
My trusty spreadsheet looked at a RentCafe scorecard tracking the challenges apartment seekers face in 139 U.S. markets – including 11 in California – as of early 2025. RentCafe’s math is based on data from Yardi that covers large apartment complexes.
These numbers tell us that a California renter lives in the same unit for 33 months, according to the median stay of the 11 Golden State markets. Nationally, a 28-month stay is the norm. That’s 18% longer for California renters.
Californians are unlikely to move because it’s so challenging to find a rental. Only 5.1% of Golden State apartments were empty as 2025 started, compared with a 6.7% vacancy rate nationwide.
That gap is a key reason why RentCafe’s national rankings have five California markets among its 25 “hardest to rent” list compiled from a collection of data points: Orange County (No. 14), Silicon Valley (No. 16), Eastern Los Angeles County (No. 17), San Diego (No. 22), and Central Valley (No. 24).
These headaches force Californians to shop harder for apartments. The typical vacant unit gets 10 looks from prospective tenants statewide vs. seven nationally.
However, Californians will relocate when the right spot becomes available. Just 51% of Golden State renters are renewing their leases this year vs. 63% nationally.
Regionally speaking
The length of a renter’s stay is not uniform across the state. Here’s how these 11 California markets compare, ranked by the length of the typical renter’s stay …
Eastern L.A. County: 40-month average stays as 51% of tenants renew. There are 4% empty units that get 13 looks from prospective tenants. This region includes areas that lost housing to January’s Eaton wildfire.
North L.A. County/Ventura County: 36-month stays, 54% renew, with 4.9% vacancies getting 10 looks.
San Francisco Peninsula/North Bay: 35-month stays, 48% renew, with 6.4% vacancies getting 7 looks.
Orange County: 35-month stays, 61% renew, and 4.4% vacancies getting 10 looks.
Central Valley: 34-month stays, 51% renew, with 4% vacancies getting 9 looks.
Sacramento: 33-month stays, 51% renew, with 5.2% vacancies getting 10 looks.
East Bay: 33-month stays, 51% renew, with 6% vacancies getting 8 looks.
Inland Empire: 33-month stays, 55% renew, with 5.1% vacancies getting 12 looks.
Silicon Valley: 31-month stays, 54% renew, with 4.9% vacancies getting 10 looks.
San Diego: 31-month stays, 54% renew, with 5.4% vacancies getting 9 looks.
Western L.A. County: 30-month stays, 42% renew, with 7% vacancies getting 8 looks. January’s Palisades fire was in this area.
Any help?
Sadly for apartment seekers, any noteworthy relief is not coming as California’s construction of fresh rental supply severely lags the nation.
U.S. developers are adding 75 new rentals for every 10,000 existing units. Currently, just one of these 11 California markets tops that pace – Silicon Valley at 93 new units per 10,000.
The rest of the state, ranked by their construction rate? Eastern L.A. and the Inland Empire at 63 per 10,000, followed by East Bay (62), San Diego (58), North L.A./Ventura (42), San Francisco/North Bay (33), Sacramento (23), Central Valley (20), Western L.A. County (18), and Orange County (15).
Jonathan Lansner is business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com
Originally Published:
California
Refreshed maps reveal fire hazard zones across Central California

TULARE COUNTY, Calif. (KFSN) — For the first time in 14 years, California’s fire hazard severity zones maps have been updated by the state fire marshal.
Based on fire history and conditions of locations, areas across the state rank from Moderate to High and Very High fire risk.
“The hazard maps are being updated to more accurately reflect areas of California that have a higher risk of wildfires, and it’s a good tool for the public to know how prepared to be,” said Savanna Birchfield-Gernt, with CAL FIRE in Tulare County.
“While it is helpful to be prepared, it is helpful to know to see a marker for where you are and see a risk of hazard.”
Action News asked about the biggest change from the old maps to the new ones.
“The addition of moderate and high fire hazards severity zones, and with that is a new requirement as of January 1st 2026, for new development to construct homes to chapter 7-A in the high fire hazard severity zones,” explained Jim McDougald, assistant deputy director for Wildfire planning and risk reduction with CAL FIRE.
In both Kings and Tulare counties, the fire hazard zones that made the list include Avenal, Woodlake, and parts of Porterville.
Plus, several unincorporated areas.
The land spans about 27,000 acres in Tulare County and close to 59,000 in Kings County, which sit between Moderate and High Risk.
“What I will tell people is we always want you to be aware of wildfires, especially when you are living in the foothills of Tulare County, where you will likely see CAL FIRE,” said Birchfield-Gernt.
In Tulare County’s unincorporated communities, nearly 500 acres are considered Very High risk, compared to none in 2011.
“A lot of people are worried about insurance when it comes to the fire hazard severity zones, so insurance companies use a different rating — they use a risk rating, and ways that people can reduce their ratings where they live is by doing things like home hardening and defensible space,” explains Birchfield-Gernt.
Cal Fire says people should work on defensible space year-round.
The first rounds of inspections are currently underway for foothill communities, including Springville, Posey or California Hot Springs, and Three Rivers..
People will have three rounds of defensible space inspections before citations are issued.
Cal Fire says their primary goal is to give people the opportunity to learn more about wildfire readiness.
You can visit this website to find the Fire Hazard Severity Zones.
The latest severity zone recommendations in California can be found here.
For news updates, follow Kassandra Gutierrez on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Copyright © 2025 KFSN-TV. All Rights Reserved.
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